Tuesday, November 25, 2008

MLNA News and Events



ENROLL NOW FOR GREEN INDUSTRY STAR CERTIFICATION. TESTING DATES ARE SET FOR JANUARY 2009
Missouri Landscape & Nursery Association’s Green Industry Star Certification Program: Modules 1 & 3 Testing Scheduled
Date: Monday, Jan. 5, 2009 3-5 p.m.
Location: Overland Park Convention Center (Courtyard Level) Meeting Room 2
Registration Information: In order to participate in Missouri Landscape & Nursery Association’s new Green Industry Star Certification’s testing, you will need to register for BOTH the 2009 WESTERN Annual Meeting and Trade Show AND with the Missouri Landscape & Nursery Association.
Please contact the Western directly for details on regristration for their conference and for hotel information visit the Western Nursery & Landscape Association
If you are registering for the certification testing, we have a limited number of discounted regristration fee passes to the Western that are being offered to those enrolled for certification testing.
There is a limited number available on first regristered basis- inquire about avaiability through MLNA treasurer Bryan Stringer at 417-725-3223. Your payment for certification testing must be recieved to qualify for these special discount passes.
For more information about our new state and nationally recognized professional Five Star certification, the various specialized module options and the Green Industry Business Star qualification if you are already PLANET CLP certified click here
Missouri Landscape and Nursery Association Registration Deadline: December 5, 2008
To register online or print application : Click here
Mail: 6209 MidRivers Mall Drive Suite 128
St. Charles, MO 63304
Minimum Registrants: 10
Maximum Registrants: 40

MLNA News& Events


Did you know Hortica offers medical group coverage as well as individual health insurance? Contact them directly to find out about their newest offering for our MLNA membership and the green industry!

Missouri Landscape & Nursery Association’s Growing Together benefit program is looking to expand and strengthen our member to member program.
If you are a MLNA member like Hortica Insurance and would like to grow your business by offering special business incentives, packaging- bundling options, fleet or professional discounts, or member only service options to other MLNA members, please contact us so we can add you to our Growing Together benefit advantage program.
Or if you provide service or product to the green industry in our region and are interested in doing business with Missouri Landscape & Association’s members, please consider offerinf a special package opportunity to our state-wide membership. Please contact us so we can discuss your options.
Here are just a few other benefits of MLNA Membership:

Green Pages listing
Business profile page on MLNA website
Green Industry STAR Professional Cortication Opportunity
Educational & Trade Show and Event discounts
Networking Opportunities at MLNA Events10% OFF Large Equipment - From John DeereFleet Rates on Lawn Care Equipment - From Club CadetCommerce Bank offers a special banking package for MLNA MembersBookstore discounts - From PLANET
And Special Insurance Rates for MLNA members from Hortica Insurance

Monday, November 24, 2008

Pest Alert Update


Missouri received a Special Local Need Registration of TREE-age (emamectin benzoate) for control of emerald ash borer last week, Nov 17, 2008 . We are not recommending preventative treatments for EAB unless it is found at least in the county adjacent or closer. Please contact me for the label details and for any questions about the treatment or recommendations- thank you

Collin Wamsley
State Entomologist
Missouri Department of Agriculture
Plant Pest Control Bureau
PO Box 630/1616 Missouri Blvd
Jefferson City, Missouri 65102
voice: 573.751.5505/5507
fax: 573.522.1109

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Research & Results


How Plants Fight Back Against Pathogens Using Complex Counter Attacks

Plants are not only smart, but they also wage a good fight, according to a University of Missouri biochemist. Previous studies have shown that plants can sense attacks by pathogens and activate their defenses. However, it has not been known what happens between the pathogen attacks and the defense activation, until now. A new MU study revealed a very complex process that explains how plants counter attack pathogens. This discovery could potentially lead to crops with enhanced disease resistance.
"There is a chemical warfare between plants and pathogens," said Shuqun Zhang, associate professor of biochemistry in the College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources and the College of Medicine. "Normally, plants put effort into growth and development. However, when plants sense pathogens, they have to use some of their energy and resources to make secondary metabolites to fight disease. Until now, very little has been known about how this process is regulated."
According to the study, plants first sense the attack of a pathogen, and then activate defense responses by triggering a complex signaling cascade in plants. One of the defense responses is the induction and accumulation of anti-microbial defense chemicals, known as phytoalexins.
In his study, Zhang found the specific signaling path, known as a mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade, in the plants that ends when the defense chemical camalexin is created. Camalexin is essential for resistance to some plant diseases. Zhang used Arabidopsis, a small flowering plant and the first to have its entire genome sequenced, and Botrytis cinera, a fungal pathogen that causes grey mold disease in a number of plants including grapes and strawberries.
"By understanding at the molecular and cellular levels how plants protect themselves under adverse environmental conditions, such as pathogen attacks, we could eventually improve the disease resistance of crops," Zhang said.
The study will be published in the March 31 online early edition publication of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

Adapted from materials provided by University of Missouri-Columbia.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Local Expertise Q&A




Car and Truck Deduction Reminders

Q: How do I know what I can deduct for my gas expenses this year. Gas prices are up, now down- It is crazy!

A: Always seek the professional advice from a reputable tax consultant. Here are a few tips and links that may be helpful you you know what to track and what information you need. Be reminded that the Internal Revenue Service recommends that taxpayers become familiar with the tax law before deducting car- and truck-related business expenses.
Overstated adjustments, deductions, exemptions and credits of all types account for more than $30 billion in unpaid taxes annually, according to the IRS. In an effort to educate taxpayers regarding their obligation to file accurate tax returns, this fact sheet, the fifth in a series, explains the rules for deducting car and truck expenses.
http://www.missouribusiness.net/news/irs_news_102606.asp
It is important to keep complete records to substantiate items reported on a tax return. In the case of car and truck expenses, the types of records required depend on whether the taxpayer claims the standard mileage rate or actual expenses.
To claim the standard mileage rate, appropriate records would include documentation identifying the vehicle and proving ownership or a lease and a daily log showing miles traveled, destination and business purpose.
For actual expenses, a mileage log helps establish business use percentage. Taxpayers should also retain receipts, invoices and other documentation to show cost and establish the identity of the vehicle for which the expense was incurred. For depreciation purposes they need to show the original cost of the vehicle and any improvements and the date it was placed in service.
Here are some valuable links:
Publication 463, Travel, Entertainment, Gift and Car Expenses
Publication 587, Business Use of Your Home
Publication 583, Starting a Business and Keeping Records
The Tax Gap
Small Business and Self-Employed One-Stop Resource Center
Online Learning and Educational Products
Abusive Home-Based Business Tax Schemes
http://www.missouribusiness.net/news/irs_news_102606.asp

Also you may be eligible for tax IRS gas mileage credits if your business has four or less vehicles. In addition, if you do any business mileage in your own car you can also claim a tax rebate. Hydrogen fuel cell cars attract substantial tax credits as do alternative fuel conversion kits. Tax IRS gas mileage credits for electric hybrids is, however, dependent on the numbers of that particular model sold by the manufacturer.
To get further information on how your standard vehicle gasoline or diesel can be modified, at very low cost and within 45 minutes, so that you can benefit from tax gas irs mileage credits of up to 4000 dollars and at least halve the money you are currently spending on your vehicle fuel costs, visit hydrogen for cars and trucks

MLNA Member GROW NATIVE recieves Green Leader Recognition


MLNA member Grow Native is a cooperative program sponsored by the Missouri Department of Conservation and the Missouri Department of Agriculture. It recieves this Green Leader recognition for its recently held informative workshop and membership meeting held at Jefferson City's beautiful Runge Conservation Center.
Over 80 participants from all over the state were able to benefit from this Grow Native workshop. Attendees walked walk away at the end of a full day with valuable updates on the current focus with native plant use in Missouri, including growing information and supply contacts. It also featured green industry recycling options.
The speakers presented with passion the importance of promting and protecting Missouri's valuable resourses. There was vision sharing as well as factual data that was inspiring and encouraging including the proposed draft form and plant list details as it applies to the new MSD native plant recomedations.
Partnerships like these need to be recognized as shaping the future of our land and industry.
Congratulations and a special thank you to Tammy Bruckerhoff and Barbara Fairchild of Grow Native and Scott Woodbury of Missouri Botanical Garden's Shaw Nature Reserve for their percerverance and their cooperative efforts with so many stakeholders that are striving to protect our water and land while encouraging the future of the green industry.
We need the valuable participation and assistance Grow Native provides. MLNA is very proud to have Grow native as a active participating member in our association- congratulation GROW NATIVE- MLNA's GREEN LEADERfor Novemeber 2008- keep up the great work!

Thursday, November 20, 2008

GREEN INDUSTRY STAR CERTIFICATION. TESTING DATES ARE SET FOR JANUARY 2009



ATTENTION ALL GREEN INDUSTRY PROFESSIONALS ENROLL NOW FOR GREEN INDUSTRY STAR CERTIFICATION. TESTING DATES ARE SET FOR JANUARY 2009

Missouri Landscape & Nursery Association’s Green Industry Star Certification Program: Modules 1 & 3 Testing Scheduled
Date: Monday, Jan. 5, 2009 3-5 p.m.
Location: Overland Park Convention Center (Courtyard Level)
Meeting Room 2
Registration Information: In order to participate in Missouri Landscape & Nursery Association’s new Green Industry Star Certification’s testing, you will need to register for BOTH the 2009 WESTERN Annual Meeting and Trade Show AND with the Missouri Landscape & Nursery Association.
Please contact the Western directly for details on registration for their conference and for hotel information visit the Western Nursery & Landscape Association If you are registering for the certification testing, we have a limited number of discounted regristration fee passes to the Western that are being offered to those enrolled for certification testing. There is a limited number available on first regristered basis- inquire about avaiability through MLNA treasurer Bryan Stringer at 417-725-3223. Your payment for certification testing must be recieved to qualify for these special discount passes.
For more information about our new state and nationally recognized professional Five Star certification, the various specialized module options and the Green Industry Business Star qualification or if you are already PLANET CLP certified click here
Missouri Landscape and Nursery Association Registration Deadline: December 5, 2008
To register online or print application : Click here
Mail: 6209 MidRivers Mall Drive Suite 128 St. Charles, MO 63304
Minimum Registrants: 10Maximum Registrants: 40

EAB new advertising campaign


USDA-APHIS-PPQ’s national EAB program is hitting multiple markets nationwide this week, including St. Louis with some mobile billboards, radio spots and newspaper articles. See email from Sharon Lucick below. I’m not going to forward the sound files since they are 3MB. You can go to http://www.stopthebeetle.info/ for more detail. I just got the info today.

Collin Wamsley
State Entomologist
Missouri Department of Agriculture
Plant Pest Control Bureau
PO Box 630/1616 Missouri Blvd
Jefferson City, Missouri 65102
voice: 573.751.5505/5507
fax: 573.522.1109


EAB new advertising campaign

Just wanted to give you all a brief overview of the new advertising campaign for EAB. It was launched last week in the 10 states known to have EAB - - note, we targeted selected geographic areas versus entire states therefore enabling us to stretch resources and the time line of the campaign. Included in this fall campaign are mobile billboards, radio ads and newspaper articles. In the spring we anticipate adding television to the mix. here is the web link to the micro site http://www.stopthebeetle.info/ (take the promise to see the state counter) and the billboard designs.


Sharon Sharon LucikPublic Affairs SpecialistUnited States Department of AgricultureAnimal & Plant Health Inspection Service5936 Ford Court, Ste. 200Brighton, MI 48116-8511810-844-2713 telephone810-844-0583 fax

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

New Trees for the 21st Century Program


You and your colleagues are cordially invited to attend the next NETWORKSHOP, co-hosted by KAT Nurseries and plantright, on Thursday, November 20th, from 5:00p-9:00p. The NETWORKSHOP will, again, be held at the Lenexa Conference Center in Lenexa, KS. As always, NETWORKSHOP is FREE and includes dinner, drinks and a fantastic opportunity to mingle with others in our industry...

Our keynote speaker will be noted plantsman Earl Cully of Heritage Trees, Inc., Jacksonville, IL. His work over the past 50+ years has brought our industry such GREAT trees as Heritage River Birch, Shawnee Brave Bald Cypress, Debonair Pond Cypress, Moonglow Sweetbay Magnolia and a number of outstanding Oaks (Regal Prince, Heritage, Kindred Spirit) just to name a few. Many of you had the chance to visit with Earl when he joined us for our NETWORKSHOP event back in February, but for those of you that missed out on that opportunity, you won't want to make the same mistake twice!


For the NETWORKSHOP program, click this link or cut and paste into your browser...
http://www.plantrightplants.com/plantright_NETWORKSHOP_Program_Invite_Fall_08.pdf

They are anticipating our largest turnout yet for this NETWORKSHOP, so DON'T wait until the last minute to reserve your seat. Call or e-mail them as soon as you can .

Earl Cully can be reached at: Earl Cully Heritage Trees Inc.
846 Hoagland Rd., Jacksonville, IL 62650-6340, United States

Monday, November 10, 2008

PLANET News features MLNA as State Partner With Certification


MNLA has launched its newly revised, eco-friendly
Green Industry Star module certification program.
The MLNA Board of Directors is very excited about the association’s efforts in assisting the industry to identify green industry professionals. “It makes
managers’ and owners’ jobs easier when hiring staff, recognizing an employee’s
abilities, and building achievement-based incentive programs with an educational
platform,” says MaryAnn Fink, environmental horticulture project advisor/ MLNA certification committee member.
The objectives of the program are to:
• Raise the standards of the green industry’s professional
horticulturist in the state of Missouri.
• Assist the public in identifying certified green industry
horticulture professionals who have been tested on
basic principles of horticulture, environmental stewardship
ideals and best management practices as they
apply to the state of Missouri.
• Improve performance within the profession by
encouraging participation in a continuing program of
professional development.
The program has five separate stand-alone modules,
including one on business management. MNLA’s certification
comprises of both the MLNA and a university based
general knowledge test, and PLANET’s Certified
Landscape Professional (CLP) certification. CLPs can
now become Green Industry Business Stars.
“As members of PLANET, we have benefited from belonging to such a professional-oriented national and international organization,” notes MLNA member MaryAnn Fink. “MLNA wants to continue that support by encouraging green industry professionals to participate in both the PLANET certification program and the MNLA Green Industry Star program.” She concludes, “Please encourage all green industry members to be professionally involved in their associations, their communities, and the future of our industry!”


Interested in becoming PLANET certified? LaserGrade computer-based testing centers
nationwide now offer PLANET Certified Landscape Professional (CLP) testing. Candidates for both the exterior and interior CLP certification designation can take advantage of the convenience of immediate unofficial results. Certified Landscape Technician-Interior (CLT-I), Certified Turf Professional-Cool Season Lawns (CTP-CSL), and Certified Ornamental Landscape Professional (COLP) exams are also offered at the testing centers. For more information about computer based testing as well as a complete list of scheduled exams, visit the Certification section of PLANET’s Web site, LandcareNetwork.org. y

Five Green Industry Action Items for President Obama By Heather Wood Taylor


While campaigning, President-Elect Barack Obama named several issues as priorities for his first months in the White House. A few of those items also happen to be on the green industry’s list of priorities for the new commander-in-chief’s agenda.
Here are some of the industry’s top action items for Obama come Jan. 20.
No. 1: The Economy
As everyone knows, when the presidency changes hands it also will change parties, and the already Democratic Congress gained even more seats in the controlling party. By far, the biggest issue swaying voters toward change this election was the economy, says Tom Delaney, director of government affairs for the Professional Landcare Network (PLANET).
“Voters were so afraid of the economy and thought (the Democratic candidates) might have a better idea or a fresher idea,” Delaney says. “Unfortunately, they didn’t give a lot of thought to the Democratic Congress that didn’t do a lot so far.”
Delaney does agree with voters that the first order of business should be to take action to help boost the economy and consumer confidence.
Terry Duran also says adding jobs and getting the economy back on track should be a top priority.
“I’m a commercial contractor who specializes in shopping center maintenance. When the economy is down, shopping is down and the store owners feel the pinch,” says Duran, owner of Preferred Property Maintenance in Pleasanton, Calif. “Some even shutter their doors, as Circuit City has recently announced. These types of situations plus bankruptcies put an extra burden on the landlord, which filters down to us, the service provider.”
A major source of the economic slowdown came from the housing sector, says David Frank, president and CEO of David J. Frank Landscape Contracting in Germantown, Wis. His region -- southeast Wisconsin -- has experienced at least 33 straight months of declining housing starts - a significant drop from just a few years ago.
"It's a more competitive environment and there has been a sliding demand for new installation services," Frank says.
Any plan to fix the economy should include a plan to boost the housing market, he adds.
"Housing can’t be ignored," he says. "You can’t send everyone a check for a hundred bucks and make economy correct."
The other essential step to making things right is balancing the budget, professionals say.
"It is time for our government to tighten its belt and not overspend, just like the rest of the country," says Sandy Munley, executive director of the Ohio Landscape Association.
Politicians can't promise to decrease taxes while also vowing to increase spending on several programs, Frank adds.
No. 2: Labor
While stabilizing the economy is priority No. 1, the fix should include a solution for the H-2B problem, Munley says.
“That will aid in taking some uncertainty out of the future for businesses,” she says.
Delaney points out that employment issues go hand in hand with the economy.
“You don’t need H-2B workers if you’re not going to have work, and you’ll have some front line people you might have to lay off,” he says.
The guest-worker program accepts 66,000 workers – 33,000 each half of the year – a number that hasn’t been enough to meet employers’ demand. A provision exempting returning workers from counting against the cap expired in September 2007 and Congress hasn’t been able to pass a new extension.
Delaney defends the program against those who say there are so many unemployed workers already in the U.S. that we shouldn’t be looking elsewhere for workers.
“The people who are out of work don’t want to do that kind of work,” he says.
This is an issue Delaney hopes will be solved before Obama even takes office. The next filing day for the H-2B program is Dec. 1. Those who need workers starting April 1, 2009 can apply then. There is a chance Congress could look at it during a possible lame-duck session, which would start Nov. 17.
No. 3: Immigration
Jaime Rios voted Nov. 4 for the first time after recently becoming a U.S. citizen. While he works in Waukegan, Ill., as a landscape contractor, his family remains in Mexico, he told Progress Illinois. His hope is that Obama puts immigration reform at the top of his to-do list. Currently, stacks of paperwork separate Rios from his family.
Activists in the green industry make it a point to separate the H-2B issue from immigration talk when they meet with representatives, arguing that guest workers only reside in the country part of the year before going back to their home countries, meaning they’re not permanent citizens as immigrants are. Plus, H-2B activists fear the H-2B issue will scare members of Congress away if they think it’s tied to the mammoth task of immigration reform.
No. 4: Industry Standards
Ryan Holt, owner of Driftwood Lawn Care and Landscaping in Rising Sun, Md., is disheartened by unlicensed contractors who bring unfair competition to the market. There doesn’t seem to be enforcement of the state law that requires contractors who do work beyond mowing to receive a license. He would like to see industry-wide standards adopted.
“Of course, everyone would still be different because of the quality of their work, and if you want to mark up materials, so be it,” Holt says. “But in terms of general overhead cost, I wish there was a level playing field.”
No. 5: Healthcare
Holt also identified healthcare as an issue that concerns him. He fears Obama’s plan to require companies to provide healthcare would cause him to pay more, which would then mean he would have to raise his prices and become less competitive.
Whatever happens, he would like to better understand what goes into the ever increasing healthcare costs as the system stands now.
“You would hope the private market would be more competitive, but they almost seem to be in collusion with one another,” he says.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
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